Police Commissioner Bill Bratton recently had 800 top NYPD brass view videos of multiple acts of police brutality, followed by a stern warning that this won’t be tolerated.

With New York passing even the Soprano State (New Jersey) in political corruption, it seems to me our elected officials would benefit greatly from a similar show.

Call it “scared straight for politicians” — a prophylactic against future acts of political wining, dining and pocket-lining.

The perfect guy to do it is US Attorney Preet Baharara, who in April 2013 warned that corrupt politicians should live in fear that some of their peers are wired up like Christmas trees and working with his office.

Bring in all state officeholders from the governor on down, plus the mayor and all city officials. No absent notes accepted.

On a movie screen, Preet would show them scenes from the award-winning “American Hustle,” based on the 1980s FBI anti-corruption operation Abscam.

Along with fake Arab sheiks and “real” mobsters, the film shows corrupt pols including US congressmen on the take.

Follow that with the real grainy video of former Staten Island Rep. John Murphy acting like a mob boss, dispatching his consigliere to pick up the Abscam bribe money — an envelope stuffed with $50,000. Next stop for him was federal jail.

Then switch to video from 2006: Brooklyn Assemblywoman Diane Gordon sitting with a building contractor who she’s willing to help as long as he gives her a house for free.

Like a diva, she specifies her demands — the size of the windows, the amount of closet space, etc. Busted on a bribery charge, she claims the contractor set her up.

Preet then switches to 2008 video of then-state Sen. Hiram Monserrate dragging his girlfriend, Karla Giraldo, through the lobby of her apartment building after having slashed her face with a broken glass.

How ironic in that when he was a cop with the NYPD, Monserrate washed out with a psychiatric disability pension.

For years, he played political footsie with Democrats and Republicans in Albany. Scratch my belly, I’ll scratch your belly.

Both parties brought their back scratchers to him, until he was convicted of misdemeanor assault of his girlfriend in court. Then they took his beak out of their Albany political trough, expelling him from the Senate.

He later pleaded guilty to mail-fraud charges for using city money to finance a failed political campaign.

Next, Preet would tell everyone to put on their headphones to hear phone conversations of two elected officials — one Democrat, one Republican.

In one recording we hear former Democratic Assemblyman Tony Seminerio say, “I was doing favors for these sons-of-bitches there, you know, they were making thousands. . . . Screw you, from now on, you know, I’m a consultant.”

Federal prosecutors charged him in 2008 with taking more than $500,000 in payments. He was sent to Bernie Madoff’s prison in North Carolina and died in his cell in 2011.

The next recording would be of former Republican City Councilman Dan Halloran, saying, “You can’t do anything without f - - - ing money. That’s politics . . . that’s our politicians in New York.” A federal court recently found Halloran guilty of taking bribes.

At that point, pictures of the more than 30 elected officials convicted of corruption in the last decade, state and citywide, should be flashed on screen under the banner New York Hall of Shame.

The “hall” has elected politicians of both parties, both genders, and a host of ethnic and racial groups.

Then, just as Bratton pointed his finger at 800 police commanders and vowed to wipe out police brutality, Preet Baharara should point his finger at all the assembled officials and vow to root out the politically corrupt among them — so that, maybe one day New York won’t be the most corrupt state in America.